Made with EPP, this small glider is both agile and very resliant to crashes. A great hotliner style glider with an 800mAh 2S pack, or bungy high-start/tow model with a 350mAh pack.
The Mini-swift is great fun slope soaring or just racing around your local park.
Included in the box is a complete set of foam for crash replacements or an entirely new model, you decide!
The Mini-swift comes plug-n-fly ready, so you only need to include your own receiver and battery to be flight-ready!

I'm hopeing its molded EPP. It may be a bit more flexable than EPO, but alot tuffer.
In a hard crash, EPO usually deforms and if you try to glue all the pieces back together, it won't be in the right shape.
But usually molded EPP springs back, so the pieces fit back into the orginal shape.
Many of the susposed EPP planes I've bought, were not EPP, but EPO or simular.

You might be right there. Hobbyking doesn't seem to mention the material and usually EPO (or EPP) is a big selling point because of the relative durability, CA compatibility, etc.

This plane looks pretty good regardless of the material....but I don't know about the rest of you guys but I'm sick of EPS. I have a bunch of EPS planes, not one of them is without hangar rash, dents, etc...

Why not just buy a Merlin? Yeah, I think the power set for the Merlin is overpriced...as MPX powersets always are...but the plane itself is beautifully engineered, flies great, fun/easy to build and looks fantastic.

Then again, not everyone spends every spare penny they have on airplanes like me....

I bought the power set despite the cost, and it works extremely well. That seemingly excessive cost goes to cover the cost of the headaches of finding a suitable setup...While nobody is perfect, MPX's research and development team is amongst the best in the industry. Build them the way they reccomend...and you're almost guaranteed a great flying plane.

My dad always said "you get what you pay for". I often buy cheap things, because I don't need them to last for twenty years. I tire of them soon. Two cheapies for the price of one quality plane- sounds good to me if the performance is similar.